Journal: J. Phonetics

Volume 40, Issue 6

725 -- 744Eunjong Kong, Mary E. Beckman, Jan Edwards. Voice onset time is necessary but not always sufficient to describe acquisition of voiced stops: The cases of Greek and Japanese
745 -- 763Antoine Serrurier, Pierre Badin, Anna Barney, Louis-Jean Boë, Christophe Savariaux. The tongue in speech and feeding: Comparative articulatory modelling
764 -- 779Sam Tilsen, Louis Goldstein. Articulatory gestures are individually selected in production
780 -- 795Sameer ud Dowla Khan. The phonetics of contrastive phonation in Gujarati
796 -- 807Satsuki Nakai, Alice Turk, Kari Suomi, Sonia Granlund, Riika Ylitalo, Sari Kunnari. Quantity constraints on the temporal implementation of phrasal prosody in Northern Finnish
808 -- 815Bodo Winter, Sven Grawunder. The phonetic profile of Korean formal and informal speech registers
816 -- 829Amandine Michelas, Mariapaola D'Imperio. When syntax meets prosody: Tonal and duration variability in French Accentual Phrases
830 -- 836Tim Bressmann. An ultrasonographic study of lingual contortion speech

Volume 40, Issue 5

625 -- 638Cátia M. R. Pinho, Luis M. T. Jesus, Anna Barney. Weak voicing in fricative production
639 -- 654Daniel Recasens, Meritxell Mira. Voicing assimilation in Catalan two-consonant clusters
655 -- 671Patrycja Strycharczuk. Sonorant transparency and the complexity of voicing in Polish
672 -- 688Christian DiCanio. Cross-linguistic perception of Itunyoso Trique tone
689 -- 705Rachel Smith, Rachel Baker, Sarah Hawkins. Phonetic detail that distinguishes prefixed from pseudo-prefixed words
706 -- 724Matthew Gordon, Latifa Nafi. Acoustic correlates of stress and pitch accent in Tashlhiyt Berber

Volume 40, Issue 4

551 -- 567Marija Tabain. Jaw movement and coronal stop spectra in Central Arrernte
568 -- 581Isabelle Darcy, Franziska Krüger. Vowel perception and production in Turkish children acquiring L2 German
582 -- 594Mark Antoniou, Michael D. Tyler, Catherine T. Best. Two ways to listen: Do L2-dominant bilinguals perceive stop voicing according to language mode?
595 -- 607Barbara Schuppler, Wim A. van Dommelen, Jacques C. Koreman, Mirjam Ernestus. How linguistic and probabilistic properties of a word affect the realization of its final /t/: Studies at the phonemic and sub-phonemic level
608 -- 622Philip Lieberman. Vocal tract anatomy and the neural bases of talking
623 -- 0Kuniko Y. Nielsen. Erratum to "Specificity and abstractness of VOT imitation" [J. Phonetics 39 (2) (2011) 132-142]

Volume 40, Issue 3

351 -- 373Amalia Arvaniti. The usefulness of metrics in the quantification of speech rhythm
374 -- 389Christine Mooshammer, Louis Goldstein, Hosung Nam, Scott McClure, Elliot Saltzman, Mark Tiede. Bridging planning and execution: Temporal planning of syllables
390 -- 402Jonah Katz. Compression effects in English
403 -- 418Snezhina Dimitrova, Alice Turk. Patterns of accentual lengthening in English four-syllable words
419 -- 429Catherine Ringen, Kari Suomi. The voicing contrast in Fenno-Swedish stops
430 -- 442Jelena Krivokapic, Dani Byrd. Prosodic boundary strength: An articulatory and perceptual study
443 -- 452Sahyang Kim, Taehong Cho, James M. McQueen. Phonetic richness can outweigh prosodically-driven phonological knowledge when learning words in an artificial language
453 -- 465Christian Kroos. Evaluation of the measurement precision in three-dimensional Electromagnetic Articulography (Carstens AG500)
466 -- 476Christina M. Esposito. An acoustic and electroglottographic study of White Hmong tone and phonation
477 -- 490Adrian P. Simpson. The first and second harmonics should not be used to measure breathiness in male and female voices
491 -- 508Lucrecia Rallo Fabra, Joaquín Romero. Native Catalan learners' perception and production of English vowels
509 -- 520Sonia Granlund, Valérie Hazan, Rachel Baker. An acoustic-phonetic comparison of the clear speaking styles of Finnish-English late bilinguals
521 -- 534Nassima B. Abdelli-Beruh. Voicing assimilation of French /t/
535 -- 549Stefan Benus. Phonetic variation in Slovak yer and non-yer vowels

Volume 40, Issue 2

213 -- 233Rachel Smith, Sarah Hawkins. Production and perception of speaker-specific phonetic detail at word boundaries
234 -- 248Lisa Davidson, Jason A. Shaw. Sources of illusion in consonant cluster perception
249 -- 268Charles B. Chang. Rapid and multifaceted effects of second-language learning on first-language speech production
269 -- 279Yen-Chen Hao. Second language acquisition of Mandarin Chinese tones by tonal and non-tonal language speakers
280 -- 288Paola Escudero, Ellen Simon, Holger Mitterer. The perception of English front vowels by North Holland and Flemish listeners: Acoustic similarity predicts and explains cross-linguistic and L2 perception
289 -- 306Tyler Kendall, Valerie Fridland. Variation in perception and production of mid front vowels in the U.S. Southern Vowel Shift
307 -- 314Martijn Wieling, Eliza Margaretha, John Nerbonne. Inducing a measure of phonetic similarity from pronunciation variation
315 -- 328Osmo Eerola, Janne Savela, Juha-Pertti Laaksonen, Olli Aaltonen. The effect of duration on vowel categorization and perceptual prototypes in a quantity language
329 -- 349Sasha Calhoun. The theme/rheme distinction: Accent type or relative prominence?

Volume 40, Issue 1

1 -- 19Björn Lindblom, Harvey M. Sussman. Dissecting coarticulation: How locus equations happen
20 -- 36Jean-Luc Schwartz, Louis-Jean Boë, Pierre Badin, Thomas R. Sawallis. Grounding stop place systems in the perceptuo-motor substance of speech: On the universality of the labial-coronal-velar stop series
37 -- 45Benjamin Parrell. The role of gestural phasing in Western Andalusian Spanish aspiration
46 -- 53Bryan Gick, Heather Bliss, Karin Michelson, Bosko Radanov. Articulation without acoustics: "Soundless" vowels in Oneida and Blackfoot
54 -- 66Laura Spinu, Irene Vogel, H. Timothy Bunnell. Palatalization in Romanian - Acoustic properties and perception
67 -- 81Hyunsoon Kim. Gradual tongue movements in Korean Palatalization as coarticulation: New evidence from stroboscopic cine-MRI and acoustic data
82 -- 91Grace E. Oh, Melissa Redford. The production and phonetic representation of fake geminates in English
92 -- 108Minjung Son, Sahyang Kim, Taehong Cho. Supralaryngeal articulatory signatures of three-way contrastive labial stops in Korean
109 -- 128Ocke-Schwen Bohn, Catherine T. Best. Native-language phonetic and phonological influences on perception of American English approximants by Danish and German listeners
129 -- 140Bruce L. Smith, Elizabeth A. Peterson. Native English speakers learning German as a second language: Devoicing of final voiced stop targets
141 -- 151Puisan Wong. Acoustic characteristics of three-year-olds' correct and incorrect monosyllabic Mandarin lexical tone productions
152 -- 161Marc Garellek. The timing and sequencing of coarticulated non-modal phonation in English and White Hmong
162 -- 176Christian DiCanio. Coarticulation between tone and glottal consonants in Itunyoso Trique
177 -- 189Molly Babel. Evidence for phonetic and social selectivity in spontaneous phonetic imitation
190 -- 197Jennifer S. Pardo, Rachel Gibbons, Alexandra Suppes, Robert M. Krauss. Phonetic convergence in college roommates
198 -- 212Sara Mack, Benjamin Munson. The influence of /s/ quality on ratings of men's sexual orientation: Explicit and implicit measures of the 'gay lisp' stereotype